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Chicago examiner j the weather m y Chicago and vlclnlty generally l^a e fair sunday and monday not quite j tj so warm light variable wlnd shift fcig iqjl irrgt easterly fif vol x no 51 a m sunday Chicago june 19 1910 c sunday ii this edition consists of m mjm i news t classified v..'u at * â€” cable 8 keal es fw py_n 3 autos tate j a vw *â€” sports financial _('] v 6 editorial via rk uis t 7 j vi a music ft magazine j_u jj _ â€” drama 10 comic jas4 --*â– -* societr roosevelt back ready to aid country former president says he is forever nation's debtor and will help solve problems thousands une streets hunter parades to battery park where first speech is made silent on politics kbw york june 18 colonel theodore j roosevelt came home to-day amid the roar mt cannon screeches of steam craft and abeers of clustered populace the ex-president mapped out his imme diate future ln a speech at battery park laying he intends to devote his energy to helping solve the country's grave problems he gave no hint that he wants to be put back ln the presidency from the time he awoke on the steamer kaiserin auguste victoria off sandy hook at 6:45 o'clock to see a gaily bedecked pilot boat steam up to the melting away of a land parade up fifth avenue in the afternoon the hunter received a generous welcome the spectacular working out of the day's demonstration gave great gratification to the republican organliatlon which had labored energetically with the roosevelt committee orders had gone out to the rank and file of the republican cohorts to see that there was nothing lacking in the way of whooping things up the sidewalks must be fringed lf lt took all the republicans in town to do lt the colonel must be cheered lf the voices of the faithful had to go hoarse at lt publicans create noise while lt ls true that on the roosevelt ommittee were many d-tlme democratic stand-bys there was no disputing the fact that with the republican organization ifter all was the credit to lie for the noise the clatter tie resounding cries for the returning chief the government sent war vessels the republican organization sent out steamers ' rowded to the guim-ales with cheering â– artisans the populace watched the spec ' acie on land and water and cheered or ' dmirod or kept still and thought about ' t as it saw fit coming back after an absence of fifteen months colonel rooseevelt was the picture . f health his face was bronzed from ] he hunt in africa his hair was per i haps a trifle more gray but the ex-pres dent looked no older for lt he was as lgorous as of yore ' the roosevelt lnck that has smiled upon he fortunes of the faunal naturalist was i with him to-day he looked out from the auguste victoria to find the sun struggling hrough a gray mist scarcely had the x-president had his breakfast before the mist was gone the sun came out in glor ous splendor and it shone upon the co onel all through the day's demonstration when the last of the day's ceremonies were over the sun disappeared behind leavy cloud6 and soon there was a torrent f xaln actvance guard greets colonel colonel roosevelt was met off sandy hook by the revenue cutter manhattan with collector loeb congressman nicholas longworth and some fifty others aboard the manhattan took him over from the au uste victoria and steamed up the bay where steam craft of all descriptions had gathered as the manhattan puffed along he battleship south carolina hove into sight there had been no intimation given to president roosevelt of the ovation that was ln store for him and he gazed with amazement upon the vessels as they crowded near the manhattan i didn't know a thing of this he er claimed gleefully i am astounded with mr roosevelt on the manhattan were mrs roosevelt kermit quentin and others of the roosevelt family not to for get mrs nle-holas longworth resplendent in a summery gown of blue mr roosevelt kept up a running fire of conversation with those aboard the manhattan as the cutter reached quaran tine the androscoggin steamed up and mr roosevelt was taken aboard to shake hands with the roosevelt committee of which cornelius vanderbilt was the head it was 8:45 when the androscoggin got mr roosevelt and from that time on until 11 o'clock when the boat put up at pier a the rough rider traveler had a brisk levee of hand shakes the and roscoggin proceeding slowly up the jer sey shore was followed by a fleet of war v y._3 tugs revenue cutters ar.d ex cursion steamers while there was not such a vociferous toot ing of whistles going up the river all the craft in the harbor let loose as the andro scoggin turning back opposite fourteenth street made its way toward the battery it had been planned to have the naval pa rade proceed up to fifty-ninth street but that would have delayed the battery park festivities which had been set for 11 o'clock waves hat from roof colonel rooseveit stood on the roof of the androscoggin's pilot house during the parade waved his hat to the cheering throngs on the boats and bowed to every body as the revenue cutter put in at pier a the colonel climbed down and was escorted to the speakers stand in battery park mavor gaynor was waiting on the stand for him the park was jammed with peo mrs lois h hazelhurst charles b hazelhurst divorced elgin society folk are wed in haste attorney b hazelhurst and mrs lola webster hayne add to complex series of episodes elgin 111 june 18 attorney charles b hazelhurst and mrs lois webster hayne principals ln a recent elgin dual divorce sensation were married this after 1 * noon at cincinnati o mr hayne'b de cree of divorce was signed in the city court of elgin only wednesday afternoon news of their marriage so soon after the ' granting of the decree to mrs hayne proved another sensation ln the series that have linked the nameÃŸ of the well-known young attorney and mrs hayne since suits for divorce were filed simultaneously by each hazelhurst was divorced about eighteen months ago by his first wife mrs nellie hazelhurst now an instructor in syra cuse university new york marries actress in secret augusta mcdowell an actress known as gussie figured in his flrst wife's suit shortly afterwards the lawyer married the actress but this was not known even to his most intimate friends until he began suit for divorce before his suit reached trial the second mrs hazelhurst won a decree suits of both hazelhurst and mrs hayne instituted in the circuit court of kane county were dismissed wednesday and that afternoon mrs hayne secured a decree in the city court of elgin mrs hayne was miss lois webster a prominent society girl her father ls super intendent for the swall adding machine company of Chicago as a girl of eighteen mrs hayne threw over a retinue of ardent suitors and mar ried mark hayne an illustrator they separated after two years and mrs hayne was seen frequently in company of hazel hurst dr j w tope is dead veteran oak park physician head of ruhli alumni two on -.-.Â«. dr john wesley tope a phystcian of oak pirk died at his residence 350 lake street yesterday he was oru on a farm near new philadelphia o he went to the civil war wheu sixteen years old and came to Chicago in 1868 ho was graduated from rush medical college and for fourteen years was an attending phy sician of the cook county hospital three years ago he established a hospital ln oak park he is survived by a widow mrs delia tope and two sons john wesley jr and oliver b just two days ago dr tope was elected to the presidency of the rush medical college alumni association he was a member of the g a r nnd a thirty-third degree mason the funerai will he held at 2:30 o'clock to-morrow leiter heirs fight tax triist of ljst:ii sue to annnl paving ahxeskment motions to annul on annual special assessment were tiled in the superior court yesterday by the trustees under the will cf the late levi z leiter the assessment ls the result of the petition by the city in the matter of paving la salle street it is denounced in the bill as unequal and in equitable pear woman has fled mrs elizabeth costcllo who was ar rested on friday in a state street depart ment store on a charge of larceny failed to appear before judce gemmill in the harrison street court yesterday it is feared by the police she has left the city ike roderick her bondsman secured a i continuance he said that he thought he lwnnld bave her in court jnne 30 heat kills 4 more relief is in sight thousands suffer when torrid wave plays pranks with the frenzied thermometer 91 degrees is registered demented man attacks dr blackwood of school board others are crazed w yesterday's temperature thermometer readings from 3 a mi saturday to 2 a m sunday 3 a m 74i 3 p m 87 4 a m 73 4 p m 83 5 a m 72 5 p m 85 j 6 a m 7*l 6 p m 85 7 a m 761 7 p m 84 8 a m 79 8 p m 83 9 a m 83 9 p m 81 10 a m 87 10 p m . j 80 11 a m 8111 p m 78 noon bl[mi dnlg-ht 77 1 p m 901 1 a m 76 2 p m 90 2 a m 75 Chicago sweltered and roasted and suf fered again yesterday ln the intense sum mer heat but better conditions are prom ised for to-day the weather man says the wind will switch around to the east this is expected to cool tlie overheated atmosphere and render life a little more worth living the thermometer played strange pranks early in the day the mercury kept climb ing higher and higher until lt reached the 87 degree mark then came a thunder shower that sent the thermometer tum bling but the sun waxed busy again as soon as the clouds had rolled away and ln less than an hour the register was higher than it had been any day this summer the relentless rays of the summer sun c_us-m untold buffering ln all parts of the city fatalities now total eleven four more deaths d_e directly to the heat were reported yesterdby bringing tho total number of fatalities during the pres ent heated spell up to eleven two old men at the alexian brothers hospital who were picked up unconscious j on the streets probably will succumb several persons were driren insane one man attacked dr alexander blackwood of the board of education on the street the man was insane from the heat the man stepped up to dr blaokwood near his office ln south Chicago anfl truck him tn the face two or three times by standers belied and held the doctor's assail ant he proved to be john doy a laborer six policemen were required to land irfm in the ambnlamce which took him to detention hospital the dead d__*v_lb robbukd jr mine mo-t-ej old 3423 carroll _,*Â»___*; tormi deed in wi sib bf wi mother heat p_Â»_-i i db g_-__l musi b uej j_tti old 43 south lincoln avenue a_rotr coÃŸ____*d suicide while tÂ«_jj_t_r_y n_fb from the heat foleet ntell-l ftfty-ooe yeara old died at th house of correrctlon from lieat jfosfcratioo hanford mrs lydia fifty yeare old guxerd 111 i died at ce-i willard hospital at heat prostration on the streets in the parks in houses and apartments there were heat prostra tions every hour few of the actual cases were reported to the police in some cases they were serious in others the victims scon recovered many are prostrated some of the cases of heat prostration re ported are bohne harri 863s marehfleld avenue figgi oharlbb a laborer 3282 augusta streeeet hartman c c a carriage paint 32*8 xorth halsted ertreet s.-mmerow forrest 865 fremont street hestley adeline a stenographar bb2 south lineota atreot , shiiiad-eto miichae ibs west w_y__il street unhoi/tz oscar a baker 1613 sednriea etteeet yai.bk john a laborer 717 temple street unidentified man sixty-five years old taken to the ale-dan brothers hoes**<ital unidentified man thirty-five yews old taken to alexian brothers hcespital the wind placed a number of pleasure seekers who had ventured out on the lake in peril dr burton hazeltine was sail ing in his yacht when a squall struck ine boat several persons from the columbia yacht club went to the rescue xoeslng about in the lake in a disabled gasoline yacht a nelson and w slattell were brought to shore by captain carland and his life-saving crew six children a man and woman mem bers of a picnic party at evanston were blown in n boat more than a mile out into the lake when the high wind came up they lost their oars charles h lapp and george howe went to their aid in a boat bringing them all ashore william nelson a tilesetter became vio lently insane as a result of the heat he was arrested while attempting to climeb the elevated loop structure at randolph street and wabash avenue lie is being held at the harrison street station two persons were bitten by dogs during the day parks are all crowded in the big downtown stores id factories and other manufacturing institutions the i suffering was intense the parks were soon crowded the department of health in a special bulletin advises the people to live out-of doors as much as possible and to sleep on porches and roofs when available el paso tex was practically the hot tost place in the country yesterday there the thermometer registered 100 at abilene amarillo denver nashville new orleans st loais st paul salt lake city and wichita the mercury wavered between 90 and 08 â– ' first rees harbor report unchanged war department sees no reason for modifying its original action in case opinion gives no right bixby says decision that piers do not obstruct navigation is not permit to build washington june 18 the official report of major thomas h rees united states engineer at Chicago was discussed and passed upon to-day by war depart ment officials and sent with recommenda tions to acting secretary of war robert shaw oliver major rees according to the reports holds that nothing has been developed in the rehearing just concluded in Chicago which would warrant him to changing his original opinion that a permit to erect piers in lake michigan near the river mouth should be granted to the Chicago oanal & dock company by a curious coincidence the question will be finally passed upon by mr oliver who a year ago indorsed major rees and ordered that a permit be issued this or der was revoked by secretary of war dioklnson who after the submission of good reasons hy the city of Chicago or dered a rehearing case attracts much attention that the case has demanded a great deal of attention here was evidenced by the presence to-day in the office of gen eral bixby chief of engineers of such distinguished united states engineers as general alexander mckenzie former chief â– of engineers and general william mar shall late chief of engineers mr oliver it la said has agreed with major rees and it is expecteed he will early next week make an indorsement as follows the rehearing ordered by the secretary at war having been held and the en gineer's office having reported thereon the war department sees no reason why the wiglnal action of the department e mod ified in fact some of tae officials say that the acting secretary o wiar in publishing that document will aot automatically for he reason that the conditions as reported to mm l.y major sees are the same prac tically as those on which mr oliver acted when he originally granted the permit in jther words the acting secretary of war will finally decide tha permit be granted thia however ln the opinion of the high est engineer authorities and of the sec retary of war means nothing as settling the dispute between the Chicago canal & dock company and the city of Chicago will not discuss report general bixby said to-day to the exam iner that the engineer's office could not discuss the case or the report of major rees in any of its phase until after lt had , been passed upon by the secretary of war , and publication had been authorised by . hlm general bixby pointed ont to-day that j the language of an official permit as lt . appears on the printed form ls deceptive ' apparently the permit gives an absolute â€¢ right that is not the fliet said general bixby in general blxby's view the war de partment merely expresses an official opinion on the question whether a pro posed structure would be an obstruction to navigation but said the chief of engineers it appears to be the logic of the situation that - where navigation is not obstructed it would not be wise to prevent commerce by navigation says opinion gives no right general bixby said that the war de partment could express its opinions to two three or any number of people as to whether a certain structure would be an obstruction to navigation and answer them all negatively bnt that the fact would give no right or title to any individual maklnge the inquiry other authorities including major rees say that the issues involved as to owner ship etc are not questions for the war department the outcome of the canal and do_k case unless very radical and unex pected changes are effected within a few days will be that the war department will restore the permit at its face value as explained by general bixby and that the next remedy of the Chicago council will be in the state courts or a case could be made involving the secretary of war's opinion which could come up in the federal courts c g gates ill in paris cable dlhpiitcli says son of john w may have to go under knife new york june 18 charles g gates according to a cable dispatch received in this city to-day is ill in paris with appen dicitis and may have to undergo nn opera tion gates his wife and his father and mother mr and mrs john w gates sailed for europe on may 21 planning to make a tour of the world just when charlie gates was stricken ls not made plain before lenving Chicago to start his world tour he assembled the employes of the blackstone hotel and lining them all up on the floor where his apartments were distributed tips lavishly gates was in the best of health when he sailed for europe nine die in wreck in france villeprei'x france june 18 the granville express to-day crashed into the ear of a local train standing at the station here both trains were wrecked and the wreckage caught fij-e nine dead and twentv have been taken ont \ â– cavalieri and chanler are wed outwit foes of their union mrs robert w chanler , formerly lina cavalieri young millionaire and singer marry hastily in paris few at ceremony by charles henry meltzer special cable to the examiner paris june 18 the marriage of una ca-valleri one of the most beautiful wom en of europe with bob chanler which took place here to-day was a surprise to all but the few friends ln whom the bride and bridegroom-elect had confided tjp to yesterday the exact date on whioh the event was to take place was still uncer tain the ceremony was hastened owing to an uneasy feeling in the minds of the two interested parties that agencies the reverse of benevolent were busy trying to prevent the match it was nearly noon to-day when several carriages drove up to the door of the dull and stupid office of the mayor of the sixth atfondlssement from one of the three alighted a lovely woman it was cavalieri in attendance waÃŸ a tall good looking man broad shouldered and smooth of face who seemed radiantly happy that was chanler few at ceremony with the principals came tho witnesses of the bride an italian painter pizzela oreste cavalieri the bride's brother and signor de segrola the well-known baritone of the metropolitan opera house then came the bridegroom's two witnesses messrs robbln and loeb and the mar quis d albino an old roman friend of the bride who was the only other person present the ceremony was of the usual dreary and depressing character the accustomed questions put at civil marriages were asked and answered the accustomed sig natures were recorded and the wedding party drove off to the well-known restaur ant the pavillion d'armeuinville in the bois de boulogne where luncheon was served quietly beneath the trees after luncheon the young pair went for a drive and then proceeded to the bride's mansion in the avenue messine where the servants ewere instructed to tell all callers except a privileged few that mr and madame chanler had gone to the country as a matter of fact just before dinner i found them both at the avenue messine hou*e with cavalieri's mother an unpre tending elderly italian woman dodging reporters who were calling every live min utes watches disconcerted visitors la belle lina was curled up on her bal cony behind a bank of tlowers watching ber disconcerted visitors as they suae and went below she looked particularly winning iu a light decollete dress and a pink gauze wrap around her throat was a necklace of pearls in her dark tresses was a yale-blue bow i am an american now she said laugh ingly and i am glad of it if i felt just a little stronger than i do i should have little left to wish for one can't lie quite contented when oue has chronic appendi citis my doctor says it is not dangerous but i may have to undergo an operation yet i shall not give up the stage next autumn i hope to begin work again leut for the present we shall remain in paris making trips now and then to our couutry house near poi ise bob ohanler fairly beamed as he lis tened to his paaier's prattle 10,000 see 100,000 fire halt car lines stubborn blaze in coffin fac tory threatens new south ern hotel traffic on six important south and west side car lines was tied np about two hours last night while many flre companies lought a stubborn excessively hot and costly fire in the factory of hornthal & co coffin makers in the rear of the com pany salesrooms 1&35 to 1389 wabash avenue a crowd of 10,000 gathered to watch the blaze it looked for a time as though adjoining buildings would catch fire and that most of the block might be swept away the new southern hotel at michigan avenue and thirteenth street is only half a block away and guests were excited by the danger many left the hotel and watched the flre the car lines tied up were the cottage grove the indiana avenue state street center ashland and archer avenue the alarm rang in about 9 o'clock and it was almost 11 o'clock before cars were able to pass the fire started in the shavings chute james thomas night watchman discovered thc fire crossed wires are thought to have ignited the chute in the building were large quantities of lumber oils mattings cotton excelsior and other highly combustible material this made an intensely hot blaze and compelled the firemen to work in relays one squad would go in and flght until the heat and smoke could be borne no longer then an other squad would rush iu assistant chief seyseriich in command of the companies fighting the blaze esti mated the loss at about 100,000 the building in whicb the salesrooms of the casket company are located which fronts on wabash avenue was saved the lo's was confined to the factory i*u\ldlng whico while quite close to ihe other su'uctu^mfl i registered ln v s patent office price five cents 0 washington june 18 the railroad bill passed the house this afternoon and was signed by president Taft at 10:15 o'clock to-night there was hut one vote against the con ference report ou the bill in the honse it was cast by representative adamso -^ democrat of georgia the chief feature of the bill is the spe cial commerce court to pass on contested interstate commerce commission rulings this feature was most strongly insisted on by the president in this respect as in most others the bill follows thc line of the hill presented in 190r by william randolph hearst then a member of con gress this commerce court as ln fact other provisions of the present bill soon to be come a law were original with mr hearst the idea grew with him when he saw how the interstate commerce commission was hampered in its work by vexatious delays through injunctions and restraining orders issued by the federal courts he presented his bill and advocated it before the house committee on interstate and e-_elgn com merce Taft gives mr hearst credit it was rejected not even the democratic members of the committee being willing to accept in his des moines speech on railroad legislation and the necessity for a special commerce court president Taft gave mr hearst credit for being the first to suggest this necessary adjunct to the fair enforcement of railroad legislation and ln the bill that was made a law t day there was embodied all the ideas that â– mr hearst six years ago sought to hive einacted into law chairman mann of the house commit tee on interstate and foreign commerce presented the conference report on the bill under agreement for one honr and thirty minutes debate mr mann said he had made good his promise to the house that if they would let the bill go to conference be would bring out a better bill than either the house or the senate bill representative bartlett democrat if georgia tried unsuccessfully to barn thrown from the conference report the provision for a commission to investigate and report on the desirability and charac ter of legislation restricting supervision of new capitalization by railroads he held this character of legislation was uncon stitutional and opposed to state's right richardson supports the bill representative richardson of alabama urged that the bill was a long step v ward government ownership of railro}e*ls and the centralization of power in uje hands of the national government de fenses of the conference report were mnr j i_fy representatives mann townsend u.i\m jlenroot all of whom argued that the a i >___\ was a forward step in railroad contra l mr lenroot said that railroad legtslatiqjh would not tie eeomplete until there h&(ph ibeen written into the statutes a law requfif m ing a valuation of all the properties of tkefl railroads w he promised to renew the agitation f_m this legislation with the beginning of __\ a ot congress next december ma the vote on final passage of the -^_ ference report whicb carried the rai'.vl^h i bill was vi'.a voce by agreement tlihb i ayes were overwhelming when speaker 1 for the negative vote only hd mr adamsou ranking tho house committee on in foreign commerce had aa railroad bill adopting old hearst ideas now a law new commerce court advo cated by mr hearst sk years ago and approved by Taft among provisions measure goes to executive is signed and members of the tribunal will be ap pointed by him soon bill giving statehood to arizona and new mexico is passed by the house and is ready for president's signature mr hearst advocated provisions years ago is march 11 1904 william r hearst in j f troduced a bill in congress making / \ the first provision over suggested tor s ) interstate commerce court ) < september 20 1909 president Taft in i } a speech at des moines la adopted ) ! c mr hearst's idea and urged the es < itablishment of a commerce court j february 19 1910 administration rail s road bill introduced in congress with j the commerce court provision as ene i of its main features june 17 1810 conference report onl railroad bill retaining commerce j court piovision adopted by senate i june 18 1910 conference report on < railroad bill adopted b.v house and ) awaits only the president's signature s to become a law j

Chicago examiner j the weather m y Chicago and vlclnlty generally l^a e fair sunday and monday not quite j tj so warm light variable wlnd shift fcig iqjl irrgt easterly fif vol x no 51 a m sunday Chicago june 19 1910 c sunday ii this edition consists of m mjm i news t classified v..'u at * â€” cable 8 keal es fw py_n 3 autos tate j a vw *â€” sports financial _('] v 6 editorial via rk uis t 7 j vi a music ft magazine j_u jj _ â€” drama 10 comic jas4 --*â– -* societr roosevelt back ready to aid country former president says he is forever nation's debtor and will help solve problems thousands une streets hunter parades to battery park where first speech is made silent on politics kbw york june 18 colonel theodore j roosevelt came home to-day amid the roar mt cannon screeches of steam craft and abeers of clustered populace the ex-president mapped out his imme diate future ln a speech at battery park laying he intends to devote his energy to helping solve the country's grave problems he gave no hint that he wants to be put back ln the presidency from the time he awoke on the steamer kaiserin auguste victoria off sandy hook at 6:45 o'clock to see a gaily bedecked pilot boat steam up to the melting away of a land parade up fifth avenue in the afternoon the hunter received a generous welcome the spectacular working out of the day's demonstration gave great gratification to the republican organliatlon which had labored energetically with the roosevelt committee orders had gone out to the rank and file of the republican cohorts to see that there was nothing lacking in the way of whooping things up the sidewalks must be fringed lf lt took all the republicans in town to do lt the colonel must be cheered lf the voices of the faithful had to go hoarse at lt publicans create noise while lt ls true that on the roosevelt ommittee were many d-tlme democratic stand-bys there was no disputing the fact that with the republican organization ifter all was the credit to lie for the noise the clatter tie resounding cries for the returning chief the government sent war vessels the republican organization sent out steamers ' rowded to the guim-ales with cheering â– artisans the populace watched the spec ' acie on land and water and cheered or ' dmirod or kept still and thought about ' t as it saw fit coming back after an absence of fifteen months colonel rooseevelt was the picture . f health his face was bronzed from ] he hunt in africa his hair was per i haps a trifle more gray but the ex-pres dent looked no older for lt he was as lgorous as of yore ' the roosevelt lnck that has smiled upon he fortunes of the faunal naturalist was i with him to-day he looked out from the auguste victoria to find the sun struggling hrough a gray mist scarcely had the x-president had his breakfast before the mist was gone the sun came out in glor ous splendor and it shone upon the co onel all through the day's demonstration when the last of the day's ceremonies were over the sun disappeared behind leavy cloud6 and soon there was a torrent f xaln actvance guard greets colonel colonel roosevelt was met off sandy hook by the revenue cutter manhattan with collector loeb congressman nicholas longworth and some fifty others aboard the manhattan took him over from the au uste victoria and steamed up the bay where steam craft of all descriptions had gathered as the manhattan puffed along he battleship south carolina hove into sight there had been no intimation given to president roosevelt of the ovation that was ln store for him and he gazed with amazement upon the vessels as they crowded near the manhattan i didn't know a thing of this he er claimed gleefully i am astounded with mr roosevelt on the manhattan were mrs roosevelt kermit quentin and others of the roosevelt family not to for get mrs nle-holas longworth resplendent in a summery gown of blue mr roosevelt kept up a running fire of conversation with those aboard the manhattan as the cutter reached quaran tine the androscoggin steamed up and mr roosevelt was taken aboard to shake hands with the roosevelt committee of which cornelius vanderbilt was the head it was 8:45 when the androscoggin got mr roosevelt and from that time on until 11 o'clock when the boat put up at pier a the rough rider traveler had a brisk levee of hand shakes the and roscoggin proceeding slowly up the jer sey shore was followed by a fleet of war v y._3 tugs revenue cutters ar.d ex cursion steamers while there was not such a vociferous toot ing of whistles going up the river all the craft in the harbor let loose as the andro scoggin turning back opposite fourteenth street made its way toward the battery it had been planned to have the naval pa rade proceed up to fifty-ninth street but that would have delayed the battery park festivities which had been set for 11 o'clock waves hat from roof colonel rooseveit stood on the roof of the androscoggin's pilot house during the parade waved his hat to the cheering throngs on the boats and bowed to every body as the revenue cutter put in at pier a the colonel climbed down and was escorted to the speakers stand in battery park mavor gaynor was waiting on the stand for him the park was jammed with peo mrs lois h hazelhurst charles b hazelhurst divorced elgin society folk are wed in haste attorney b hazelhurst and mrs lola webster hayne add to complex series of episodes elgin 111 june 18 attorney charles b hazelhurst and mrs lois webster hayne principals ln a recent elgin dual divorce sensation were married this after 1 * noon at cincinnati o mr hayne'b de cree of divorce was signed in the city court of elgin only wednesday afternoon news of their marriage so soon after the ' granting of the decree to mrs hayne proved another sensation ln the series that have linked the nameÃŸ of the well-known young attorney and mrs hayne since suits for divorce were filed simultaneously by each hazelhurst was divorced about eighteen months ago by his first wife mrs nellie hazelhurst now an instructor in syra cuse university new york marries actress in secret augusta mcdowell an actress known as gussie figured in his flrst wife's suit shortly afterwards the lawyer married the actress but this was not known even to his most intimate friends until he began suit for divorce before his suit reached trial the second mrs hazelhurst won a decree suits of both hazelhurst and mrs hayne instituted in the circuit court of kane county were dismissed wednesday and that afternoon mrs hayne secured a decree in the city court of elgin mrs hayne was miss lois webster a prominent society girl her father ls super intendent for the swall adding machine company of Chicago as a girl of eighteen mrs hayne threw over a retinue of ardent suitors and mar ried mark hayne an illustrator they separated after two years and mrs hayne was seen frequently in company of hazel hurst dr j w tope is dead veteran oak park physician head of ruhli alumni two on -.-.Â«. dr john wesley tope a phystcian of oak pirk died at his residence 350 lake street yesterday he was oru on a farm near new philadelphia o he went to the civil war wheu sixteen years old and came to Chicago in 1868 ho was graduated from rush medical college and for fourteen years was an attending phy sician of the cook county hospital three years ago he established a hospital ln oak park he is survived by a widow mrs delia tope and two sons john wesley jr and oliver b just two days ago dr tope was elected to the presidency of the rush medical college alumni association he was a member of the g a r nnd a thirty-third degree mason the funerai will he held at 2:30 o'clock to-morrow leiter heirs fight tax triist of ljst:ii sue to annnl paving ahxeskment motions to annul on annual special assessment were tiled in the superior court yesterday by the trustees under the will cf the late levi z leiter the assessment ls the result of the petition by the city in the matter of paving la salle street it is denounced in the bill as unequal and in equitable pear woman has fled mrs elizabeth costcllo who was ar rested on friday in a state street depart ment store on a charge of larceny failed to appear before judce gemmill in the harrison street court yesterday it is feared by the police she has left the city ike roderick her bondsman secured a i continuance he said that he thought he lwnnld bave her in court jnne 30 heat kills 4 more relief is in sight thousands suffer when torrid wave plays pranks with the frenzied thermometer 91 degrees is registered demented man attacks dr blackwood of school board others are crazed w yesterday's temperature thermometer readings from 3 a mi saturday to 2 a m sunday 3 a m 74i 3 p m 87 4 a m 73 4 p m 83 5 a m 72 5 p m 85 j 6 a m 7*l 6 p m 85 7 a m 761 7 p m 84 8 a m 79 8 p m 83 9 a m 83 9 p m 81 10 a m 87 10 p m . j 80 11 a m 8111 p m 78 noon bl[mi dnlg-ht 77 1 p m 901 1 a m 76 2 p m 90 2 a m 75 Chicago sweltered and roasted and suf fered again yesterday ln the intense sum mer heat but better conditions are prom ised for to-day the weather man says the wind will switch around to the east this is expected to cool tlie overheated atmosphere and render life a little more worth living the thermometer played strange pranks early in the day the mercury kept climb ing higher and higher until lt reached the 87 degree mark then came a thunder shower that sent the thermometer tum bling but the sun waxed busy again as soon as the clouds had rolled away and ln less than an hour the register was higher than it had been any day this summer the relentless rays of the summer sun c_us-m untold buffering ln all parts of the city fatalities now total eleven four more deaths d_e directly to the heat were reported yesterdby bringing tho total number of fatalities during the pres ent heated spell up to eleven two old men at the alexian brothers hospital who were picked up unconscious j on the streets probably will succumb several persons were driren insane one man attacked dr alexander blackwood of the board of education on the street the man was insane from the heat the man stepped up to dr blaokwood near his office ln south Chicago anfl truck him tn the face two or three times by standers belied and held the doctor's assail ant he proved to be john doy a laborer six policemen were required to land irfm in the ambnlamce which took him to detention hospital the dead d__*v_lb robbukd jr mine mo-t-ej old 3423 carroll _,*Â»___*; tormi deed in wi sib bf wi mother heat p_Â»_-i i db g_-__l musi b uej j_tti old 43 south lincoln avenue a_rotr coÃŸ____*d suicide while tÂ«_jj_t_r_y n_fb from the heat foleet ntell-l ftfty-ooe yeara old died at th house of correrctlon from lieat jfosfcratioo hanford mrs lydia fifty yeare old guxerd 111 i died at ce-i willard hospital at heat prostration on the streets in the parks in houses and apartments there were heat prostra tions every hour few of the actual cases were reported to the police in some cases they were serious in others the victims scon recovered many are prostrated some of the cases of heat prostration re ported are bohne harri 863s marehfleld avenue figgi oharlbb a laborer 3282 augusta streeeet hartman c c a carriage paint 32*8 xorth halsted ertreet s.-mmerow forrest 865 fremont street hestley adeline a stenographar bb2 south lineota atreot , shiiiad-eto miichae ibs west w_y__il street unhoi/tz oscar a baker 1613 sednriea etteeet yai.bk john a laborer 717 temple street unidentified man sixty-five years old taken to the ale-dan brothers hoes**___\ was a forward step in railroad contra l mr lenroot said that railroad legtslatiqjh would not tie eeomplete until there h&(ph ibeen written into the statutes a law requfif m ing a valuation of all the properties of tkefl railroads w he promised to renew the agitation f_m this legislation with the beginning of __\ a ot congress next december ma the vote on final passage of the -^_ ference report whicb carried the rai'.vl^h i bill was vi'.a voce by agreement tlihb i ayes were overwhelming when speaker 1 for the negative vote only hd mr adamsou ranking tho house committee on in foreign commerce had aa railroad bill adopting old hearst ideas now a law new commerce court advo cated by mr hearst sk years ago and approved by Taft among provisions measure goes to executive is signed and members of the tribunal will be ap pointed by him soon bill giving statehood to arizona and new mexico is passed by the house and is ready for president's signature mr hearst advocated provisions years ago is march 11 1904 william r hearst in j f troduced a bill in congress making / \ the first provision over suggested tor s ) interstate commerce court ) < september 20 1909 president Taft in i } a speech at des moines la adopted ) ! c mr hearst's idea and urged the es < itablishment of a commerce court j february 19 1910 administration rail s road bill introduced in congress with j the commerce court provision as ene i of its main features june 17 1810 conference report onl railroad bill retaining commerce j court piovision adopted by senate i june 18 1910 conference report on < railroad bill adopted b.v house and ) awaits only the president's signature s to become a law j